Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia. Edited by Dario Brentin and Dejan Zec

Posebni broj časopisa “The International Journal of the History of Sport” iz 2017. godine koji se bavi poviješću sporta u socijalističkoj Jugoslaviji dostupan je od 2018. godine i u obliku knjige “Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia”.

 

 

Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia

 

Dario Brentin, Dejan Zec

 

Routledge

 

Published October 9, 2018

 

Reference – 154 Pages

 

Series: Sport in the Global Society – Historical Perspectives

 

 

Description

 

Summary

 

The history of sport in socialist Yugoslavia is a peculiar lens through which to examine the country’s social, cultural and political transformations. Sport is represented as one of the most popular and engaging cultural phenomena of social life. Sport both embodied the social dynamics of the socialist period as well as revealing questions of the everyday lives of the Yugoslav people. Ultimately, sport was closely intertwined with the country’s overall destiny. This volume offers an introduction into the myriad social functions that sport served in the Yugoslav socialist project. It illustrates how sport was central to the establishment of Yugoslavia’s physical and leisure culture in the early post-Second World War period, an international promotional tool for Yugoslav communists championing the ideological superiority of the ‘Brotherhood and Unity’ and the Non-Aligned Movement, as well as a social field in which the ideological contradictions of Yugoslav socialism became increasingly apparent. The chapters expand the existing knowledge of the processes that defined Yugoslav sport and contribute to a more nuanced understanding of socialist Yugoslavia in the years between 1945 and 1991.

 

This book was originally published as a special issue of The International Journal of the History of Sport.

 

Table of Contents

 

  1. From the Concept of the Communist ‘New Man’ to Nationalist Hooliganism: Research Perspectives on Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia

Dario Brentin and Dejan Zec

  1. How Falcons Became Partizans

Hrvoje Klasić

  1. How Doing Sport Became a Culture: Producing the Concept of Physical Cultivation of the Yugoslavs

Ana Petrov

  1. Gender Policies and Amateur Sports in Early Yugoslav Socialism

Ivan Simić

  1. Like a Bridge Over Troubled Adriatic Water: The Complex Relationship between Italian and Yugoslavian Sporting Diplomacy (1945-1954)

Nicola Sbetti

  1. Laying the Foundations of Physical Culture: The Stadium Revolution in Socialist Yugoslavia

Richard Mills

  1. FC Red Star Belgrade and the Multiplicity of Social Identifications in Socialist Yugoslavia: Representative Dimensions of the ‘Big Four’ Football Clubs

Martin Blasius

  1. The 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics and Identity-Formation in Late Socialist Sarajevo

Zlatko Jovanovic

  1. Blind-Alleys on the Road to Communism: ‘Isms’ of the Automobile Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia, 1945-1992

Marko Miljković

 

Editor(s) Bio

Dario Brentin is Affiliated Researcher at the Centre for Southeast European Studies at the University of Graz, Austria, and a PhD candidate at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies at University College London, UK, working on sport, politics and ideology in the post-Yugoslav region.

Dejan Zec is a Researcher at Grenoble Ecole de Management, France, and a PhD candidate at the University of Belgrade, Serbia. He has published widely on social history, history of everyday life, sport and leisure history, and history of health care in former Yugoslavia.

 

 

https://www.crcpress.com/Sport-in-Socialist-Yugoslavia/Brentin-Zec/p/book/9781138322370

 

 

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